According to the tape transcript, which Exaro News noted was partially “redacted … for legal reasons,” Murdoch claimed that News Corp’s UK branch, News UK, was being “picked on” for doing what everyone else in the British press was doing.

Murdoch is quoted as saying:

“I think it’s just outrageous, but – and I don’t know of anybody, or anything, that did anything that wasn’t being done across Fleet Street and wasn’t the culture. And we’re being picked on…There was a sort of – we got caught with dirty hands, I guess, with the News of the World, and everybody piled on.”

Murdoch went on to seemingly defend the practice of swapping cash for stories with the police and even put the blame on the police. Journalists have been paying “for news tips from cops…a hundred years, absolutely,” Murdoch claimed, further adding that the payments were probably “made at the instigation of cops.”

He also told staff present at the meeting that he’d “give you total support, even if you’re convicted and get six months or whatever” and that if he isn’t going to be around, his son Lachlan or News Corp CEO Robert Thomson are in charge. But, in response to a question about how Murdoch knew things would be fine, he said “it’s nothing much more than a hunch.”

Murdoch also offered more information about News Corp’s Management and Standards Committee, which was created following the closure of News of the World amidst growing accusations of phone hacking. News Corp’s website said that the committee is to “take responsibility for all matters in relation to phone hacking at the News of the World, payments to the police and all other related issues at News International.” The committee, as iMediaEthics has written before, has been turning over information to police to investigate and many journalists have been arrested because of that information.

In the tape, Murdoch said that the committee hasn’t turned over any information to the police “for months” and that lawyer Kathleen Harris, whose website lists her as the committee’s “lead Criminal adviser,” “told [the committee] to stop” giving information.

He added that “it was a mistake, I think,” for the committee to give information to the police about the Sun.

Murdoch also addressed the status of News Corp’s anonymous sources after a journalist said one of his sources was arrested for leaking information for a story. iMediaEthics has previously written about the concerns of UK journalists that the committee was endangering anonymous sources because the committee had access to e-mails from staff and was providing them to police.

Murdoch called for staff to “protect sources,” and then said that a News of the World source who had been “paid a bundle, a huge bundle of money” for a story said she was hacked because “some idiot at the News of the World…hacked it just to check,” putting that story in jeopardy.

In response to the tape, a News Corp. spokesperson told The Wall Street Journal, which is owned by News Corp., that Murdoch “never knew of payments made by Sun staff to police before News Corporation disclosed that to U.K. authorities.” The spokesperson added that Murdoch “never said he knew of payments” and “it’s absolutely false to suggest otherwise.”

And, the assistant commissioner for the UK Metropolitan police, Cressida Dick, told Parliament that the police are trying to get “the tape of the meeting” to “assess the full contents” of his comments, the Guardian reported.

A statement from News Corp to the Guardian suggested Murdoch would be willing to appear in Parliament. “Mr Murdoch welcomes the opportunity to return to the select committee and answer their questions. He looks forward to clearing up any misconceptions as soon as possible,” the statement reads.